TYPE SPECIMENS OF BIRDS 525 



The new names in Certhiola published in the "American Naturalist" 

 (7: 611-613, October 1873) and commonly accredited to Ridgway are, in 

 fact, Baird's. 



Genus ATELEODACNIS Casein 



Ateleodacnis margaritae Holt 

 Auk48(4):570,Oct. 18, 1931. 

 ==Ateleodacnis margaritae Holt. See Friedmann, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus. 



97: 541, 1948. 

 326560. Adult male. Ceo do Arary (north bank of the Rio Amazonas, 

 above Parintins), State of Amazonas, Brazil. September 20, 1930. 

 Collected by Ernest G. Holt, Robert E, R. Blake, and Charles T. 

 Agostini. Original number 3703. National Geographic Society 

 Brazil- Venezuela Expedition. 



Genus OREOMANES Sclater 



Oreomanes binghami Chapman 



Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist. 41 (5) : 331, Sept. 1, 1919. 



=Oreomanes fraseri Sclater. See Hellmayr, Catalogue of birds of the 

 Americas 8: 330, 1935. 



273004. Immature (not adult) female. Cedrobamba (elev. 12,000 feet) , 

 near Machu Picchu, Department of Cuzco, Peru. June 13, 1915. 

 Collected by Edmund Heller. Original number 174. Yale University- 

 National Geographic Society Peruvian Expedition (1914-1915). 



Family PARULIDAE: Wood Warblers 



Genus LIMNOTHLYPIS Stone 



Limnothlypis swainsonii alia Meanley and Bond 

 Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington 63 : 192, Dec. 29, 1950. 

 362424. Adult male. Fifteen miles north of Walhalla, Oconee County, 

 South Carolina. June 25, 1940, Collected by Watson M. Perrygo 

 and J. Southgate Y. Hoyt. Original number 4681. 

 Sylvia swainsonii Audubon 



Birds of America (folio) 2 (40) : pi. 198, June? 1834. 

 =Limnothlypis swainsonii swainsonii (Audubon), fide Deignan (MS.). 

 2901. Adult (sex not indicated). "Near the banks of the Edisto River" 

 {fide Audubon, Ornithological biography 2:564, 1834), Charleston 

 County, South Carolina. "Spring of 1832" [fide Audubon, ibid.). 

 Collected by John Bachman. Received from Spencer F. Baird, who 

 acquired it from John J. Audubon? 

 Baird's label does not show the letter "N" that distinguished his Audu- 

 bonian specimens, but since No. 2901 came to him with a number of other 

 skins definitely acquired from Audubon, it may be assumed that the letter 

 was omitted by an oversight. 



