102 CHECK LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 



624. Pelidna alpina americana (Cass.) Allen. B 530. c 424. R 539o. 



American Dunlin. 



625. Ancylochihis snbarquatus (Guld.) Kaup. B 529. c 425. R 540. 



Curlew Sandpiper. 



626. Tringa caimtus L. B 520. c 420. R 529. 



Red-breasted Sandpiper ; Robin Snipe ; Knot. [See Addenda, No. 881. 



627. Calidris arenaria (L.) 111. B 534. c 427. R 542. 



Sanderling. 



628. Limosa fceda (L.) Ord. B 547. c 428. R 543. 



Great Marbled Godwit. 



629. Limosa hsemastica (L., 1758) Coues. B 548. c 429. R 545. 



Hudsonian Godwit. 



624. P. a. am-gr-I-ca'-na. See Parula, No. 93. 



625. An-cy-lo-chi'-lus sub-ar-qua'-tus. Gr. ay/cuAoxeiAos, having a curved bill : ayitv\os, 



crooked, bent, from ayKcov, the bent elbow, and x e ' Aos > tne mouth, from a word signify- 

 ing to open, to gape. Lat. subarquatus, slightly curved ; see Arquatella, No. 620. 



626. Trm'-ga can-u'-tus. Lat. tringa, or trynga, or tryngas, a sandpiper; not classic. Derived 



from Gr. rpvyyas, an obscure and obsolete word, occurring in Aristotle as the name of 

 some unknown bird. The species was very aptly named by Linnaeus after old King 

 Canute, who, it is said, sat on the seashore and allowed the waves to reach him, to 

 rebuke his toadying courtiers who had declared the sea would obey his majesty , a 

 myth according well with the habits of sandpipers. Canutus, if it has any relation 

 with, or is of same meaning as canus, gray, hoary, iroAto's, is well suited either to the 

 old king, or to this sandpiper in its winter dress. 



627. Cal-id'-ris a-re-na'-ri-a. Gr. <rKa\ipis or Ka\i8pis, Lat. scalidris or calidris, aij obscure 



Aristotelian bird, by some supposed to be the modern totanus calidris. The word is 

 apparently from trtca\is, some digging instrument, from O-KOAA.CO, I scrape, rake, &c., and 

 refers to the same probing habits of this sandpiper that ereinieles signalizes. But the 

 form Challdris also occurs, as in Belon for example ; whence some refer the word to the 

 Gr. x^'' Lat. calx, calculus, &c., considering that it alludes to the pebbly or shingly 

 beaches which the bird frequents. Lat. arenarius, relating to sand; arena, sand, or a 

 sandy place, as the arena was, where gladiatorial and other sports were witnessed by 

 the Roman brutes. 



628. Li-mo'-sa foe'-da. Lat. limosus, miry, muddy ; limits, mud, slime. We can learn nothing of 



any such word nsfedoa, and take it to be a misprint or other mistake for feed us, -a, -urn, 

 ugly, unseemly, &c. It might be supposed to have some relation to feed us, a compact, 

 treaty, the sense of which is seen in federal, confederate, &c., and the application of which 

 would be to the gregariousness of the bird. But fccdus, in the latter sense, is not an 

 adjective; it is fccdus,fceder!s, and the adjectival form would be federatits ; while there is 

 an adjective fadus, ugly, as well as a verb fvedo, to defile, the participial of which is 

 foedatus. In view of these facts, we propose to substitute jferfa forfedoa, until some satis- 

 factory explanation of the latter can be given. Fcdoa occurs at least as far back as 

 Edwards as the name of this species, and has since passed unchallenged. 



629. L. haem-as'-ti-ca. Gr. ai/xao-Ti/co's or alfjutTiitds, hsemastic or haematic, of a bloody-red 



color ; alfj.dcrcrci}, I make bloody ; aljua, blood ; referring to the red under parts, so con- 

 spicuous in this species. 



This stands as L. hudsonica in the orig. ed. See Coues, Bull. Nutt. Club, v, 1880, 

 p. 100. 



