584 APPENDIX. 



g^. Larger, with legs and feet yellowish brown or olive-yellowish ; length 

 about 48.00-54.00, wing 19.50-21.00 (20.00), tail 7.15-8.00 (7.58), ex- 

 posed culmen 5.90-6.90 (6.25), depth of bill at base 1.10-1.30 (1.19), 

 tarsus 7.85-8.40 (8.19), middle toe 4.65-5.15 (4.83), bare portion of 

 tibia 4.45-5.60 (5.05). Hah. Florida, chiefly (?) on western side; 

 south to Oyster Bay, north to Gainesville. 



193. A. wardi Eidgw. Ward's Heron. 



^^ Smaller, with black or dusky legs and feet, the tibia, only, yellowish ; 

 length about 40.00-48.00, wing 18.00-19.50 (18.58), tail 7.00-7.50 

 (7.23), exposed culmen 5.45-5.95 (5.68), depth of bill at base 1.05- 

 1.17 (1.14), tarsus 6.75-7.85 (7.16), middle toe 3.90-4.50 (4.18), naked 

 portion of tibia 4.00-4.50 (4.20). Hah. Whole of temperate North 

 America (except middle and southern Florida) ; north to Hudson's 

 Bay and Sitka, south through Middle America to Colombia and 

 Yenezuela (including Cura^oa) ; Bermuda ; Galapagos ? 



194. A. herodias Linn. Great Blue Heron. 



Subgenus NYCTHERODIUS Eeichenbach, page 133. 



The name Nyctherodius, as applied by Eeichenbach (in 1852) to this subgenus 

 (or genus), being antedated by its iise in an entirely different connection by Mac- 

 gillivray in 1842, Dr. Stejneger has proposed (Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. x. 1887, in 

 press) as a substitute the name Nydanassa, with Ardea violacea Linn, as type. 



No. 198. Ardea rufa Bodd., page 131. Reddish Egret. 



This name being preoccupied (by Scopoli, in 1769) for another species, it 

 becomes necessary to substitute the next in order of date. The species will there- 

 fore have to be called Ardea rufescens Gmel. (S. N. i. pt. ii. 1788, 628). 



Genus SYMPHEMIA Eafinesque, page 167. 



Mi\ Brewster has recently separated the western birds of this species as a 

 geographical race, the main distinctive characters of which are as follows: — 



a^. Smaller, with relatively shoi'ter and thicker bill ; summer adults with ground- 

 color of upper parts darker, more olive-grayish, more heavily spotted or 

 barred with dusky, the anterior and lateral lower parts also more heavily 

 marked with dusky ; wing 7.06-7.75 (7.36), tail 2.71-3.30 (2.91), exposed cul- 

 men 2.02-2.31 (2.19), tarsus 2.08-2.42 (2.29). Hob. Atlantic coast of United 

 States 258. S. semipalmata (Gmel.). Willet. 



a^ Larger, with relatively longer and slenderer bill ; summer adults with ground- 

 color of upper parts paler, more ashy, gray, less heavily marked with dusky, 

 the anterior and lateral lower parts also less heavily marked ; wing 7.88- 

 8.26 (8.11), tail 3.10-3.50 (3.29), exposed culmen 2.28-2.70 (2.46), tarsus 2.45- 

 2.95 (2.66). Hah. Western North America, east to Mississippi Valley (Illi- 



