198 BULLETIN 50, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM 



lumbia Prov. Mus. No. 1, 1939, 27 (Peace River District, British Columbia; 

 spec. ; young). 



Pediocaetes phasianellus campestris Cooke, Colorado State Agr. Coll. Bull. 37, 1897, 

 71 (Colorado; not common) ; Bull. 44, 1898, 159 (Colorado; not uncommon in 

 northwestern part of the state). 



Pedioccetes phasianellus campestris American Ornithologists' Union, Check-list, 

 1886, No. 308b, part; ed. 2, 1895, 117, part; ed. 3, 1910, 144, part.— Ridgway, 

 Man. North Amer. Birds, 1887, 204, part. — Cooke, Bird Migr. Mississippi Val- 

 ley, 1888, 106, part.— Bendire, Auk, vi, 1889, 301 in text (Fort Custer, Mont.); 

 Life Hist. North Amer. Birds, i, 1892, 101, part.— Thorne, Auk, xii, 1895, 213 

 (Fort Keogh, Mont. ) .— Macoun, Cat. Can. Birds, 1900, 213, part (plains of 

 U. S. and northward). — Sclater, Hist. Birds Colorado, 1912, 152, part (Colo- 

 rado; not common, chiefly east of the mountains). 



Pedioccetes phasianelhis campestris? Richmond and Knowlton, Auk, xi, 1894, 302 

 (Montana). 



P[edioc(etes] phasianelhis campestris Ridgway, Man. North Amer. Birds, 1887, 204, 

 part. 



Pediocaetes phasianelhis campestris Goss, Hist. Birds Kansas, 1891, 228 (Kansas; 

 habits; descr.). 



Pedioccetes phasianelhis campestris Zimmer, Proc. Nebraska Orn. Union, v, pt. 2, 

 1911, 21 (Nebraska; Dawes County Forest Reserve; young). — Grave and 

 Wai^ker, Birds Wi'oming, 1913, 40 (Wyoming; common in eastern and north- 

 western parts). — Saunders, Pacific Coast Avif. No. 14, 1921, 59 (Montana; 

 intergrades with columbianus in western part of state). — Over and Thoms, 

 Birds South Dakota, 1921, 77 (South Dakota) .—Wood, Misc. Publ. Mus. Zool. 

 Univ. Michigan, No. 10, 1923, 36 (North Dakota; common). — Mitchell, Can. 

 Field Nat., xxxviii, 1924, 108 (Saskatchewan; common resident). — Gabrielson 

 and Jewett, Auk, xli, 1924, 297 (in badlands and brakes of Missouri River, N. 

 Dak.). — Nice and Nice, Birds Oklahoma, 1924, 37 (Oklahoma Panhandle; for- 

 mer resident, now nearly extirpated). — Lincoln, Auk, xlii, 1925, 60 (Turtle and 

 Devils Lakes, N. Dak.; food).— Williams, Wils. Bull., xxxviii, 1926, 30 (Red 

 River Valley, ne. N. Dak.). — Taverner, Birds Western Canada, 1926, 172 in 

 text, part; Birds Canada, 1934, 161 in text, part. — Larson, Wils. Bull., xl, 1928, 

 46 (e. McKenzie Count>', N. Dak.). — American Ornithologists' Union, Check- 

 list, ed. 4, 1931, 86, part.— Nice, Birds Oklahoma, rev. ed., 1931, 81 (Oklahoma 

 Panhandle, former resident, now nearly extirpated). — Harrold, Wils. Bull., xlv, 

 1933, 19 (Lake Johnston, Saskatchewan). — Peters, Check-list Birds of World, 

 ii, 1934, 41, part. — Johnson, Wils. Bull., xlvi, 1934, 8 (nw. Manitoba; habits; 

 migr.).— McCreary and Mickey, Wils. Bull., xlvii, 1935, 129 in text (se. Wyo. ; 

 resident). — Snyder, Univ. Toronto Studies, biol. ser.. No. 40, 1935, 4, 7, 40 in 

 text, 55 (crit. ; monogr.) ; Occ. Papers Roy. Ontario Mus. Zool., No. 2, 1935, 5 

 (monogr.). — Weydemeyer and Marsh, Condor, xxxviii, 1936, 194 (Lake Bow- 

 doin, Mont.). — Fox, Auk, liv, 1937, 534 in text (North Dakota; feeding on wild 

 plum). — Alexander, Univ. Colorado Studies Zool., xxiv, 1937, 91 (Boulder 

 County, Colo.; correction; no recent records). — Long, Trans. Kansas Acad. Sci., 

 xliii, 1940, 440 (Kansas; common formerly, now probably extirpated). — Hell- 

 mayr and Conover, Cat. Birds Amer., 1, No. 1, 1942, 219 part (syn. ; distr.).— 

 Wright and Hl\tt, Auk, Ix, 1943, 265 in text (age indicators in plum. ; Mon- 

 tana). 



Pedioccetes phasianellus campestris Lantz, Trans. Kansas Acad. Sci., for 1896-1897 

 (1899), 254 (Kansas; common in western part). — Gary, Auk, xviii, 1901, 232 

 (Black Hills, S. Dak.).— Snow, Cat. Birds Kansas, ed. 5, 1903, 15 (w. Kansas; 

 common). — Bent, Auk, xxiv, 1907, 428 (sw. Saskatchewan; nests and eggs).— 



