Jack-Pine Warbler (Michigan) 

 Journal of Animal Ecology 

 Journal of Applied Ecology 

 Journal of Wildlife Management 

 (N. America) 



Larus (Yugoslavia, eastern Europe) 

 L°Oiseau et la Revue Francaise 

 d°Ornithologie (France, world) 



Journal fur Ornithologie (Germany, 



world) 

 Journal of Ecology 

 Kingbird (New York) 



Limosa (Netherlands) 



Loon (Minnesota) 



Louisiana Ornithological Society News 



Marine Pollution Bulletin 



Mississippi Kite 



Murrelet (Pacific northwestra Alaska, 



western Canada) 

 Notornis (New Zealand, Pacific islands) 



Oikos (Denmark, Scandinavia) 

 Ornis Fennica (Finland, Baltic area) 

 Der Ornithologische Beobachter 

 (Switzerland, middle Europe) 

 Ostrich (South Africa) 



Maryland Birdlife 



Mississippi Ornithological Society 



Newsletter 

 Nos Oiseaux (France, western Europe) 



Oriole (Georgia) 



Ornis Scandinavica (Scandinavia, 



Finland) 

 Ornithologische Mitteilungen (world) 



Proceedings of the Louisiana Academy 



of Science 

 Revue Suisse de Zoologie (Switzerland, 



central Europe) 



Ring (Europe, world) 



Rivista Italiana di Ornithologia (Italy) 



Scottish Birds 



Southwestern Naturalist (southwestern 



U.S.) 

 Suomen Riista (Finland, Baltic area) 



Texas Journal of Science 



Transactions of the North American Wild- 

 life and Natural Resources Conference 



Die Vogelwarte (western and central 

 Europe) 



Wilson Bulletin (North America, world) 



Zoologichesky Zhurnal (U.S.S.R.) 



Proceedings of the Annual Conference 

 Southeastern Association of Game 

 and Fish Commissioners (southeastern 

 U.S.) 



Ringing & Migration (Great Britain, 



world) 

 South Australian Ornithologist 

 Soviet Journal of Ecology 

 Sterna (Norway) 



Tori (Japan) 



Var Vagelvarld (Sweden) 



Vestnik Zoologi (U.S.S.R.) 



Western Birds (western U.S.) 



Wildfowl 



Zeitschrift fur Tierpsychologie 



The reprint files of several institutions were a particularly fertile source 

 for some undistributed material. The most useful of these were the files of the 

 National Fish and Wildlife Laboratory, the Bird Division of the National Museum 

 of Natural History, the American Museum of Natural History, and the Bird Library 

 of the Gabrielson Laboratory of Patuxent National Wildlife Research Center. 



In all, about 10,000 citations dealing directly with the species treated 

 are included in the three parts of this report. Perhaps an additional 1,000 

 more general articles are listed in the Literature Cited sections at the end of 

 the three volumes. 



