BIRDS OF NORTH AND MIDDLE AMERICA 461 



xlii, 1940, 39, in text (Pomona, Calif.; 1 band, return). — Todd, Birds Western 

 Pennsylvania, 1940, 149 (w. Pennsylvania; descr.; life hist.; syn.). — Traut- 

 MAN, Misc. Publ. Univ. Michigan Mus. Zool., No. 44, 1940, 216 (Buckeye 

 Lake, Ohio; casual vis.). — Goodpaster, Journ. Cincinnati Soc. Nat. Hist., 

 xxii, 1941, 12 (sw. Ohio; rare migr.). — Rivers, Condor, xliii, 1941, 66, in 

 text (Nevada; food habits). — Stabler, Auk, Iviii, 1941, 560 (used in parasite 

 experiment). — Ckuickshank, Birds around New York City, 1942, 139 

 (New York City; status). — Laing, Condor, xliv, 1942, 176 (coastal British 

 Columbia). — Musselman, Auk, lix, 1942, 106, in text (w. Illinois). — Pear- 

 son, Brimley, and Erimley, Birds North Carolina, 1942, 98 (North Caro- 

 lina). — Stevenson, Condor, xliv, 1942, 110 (c. Panhandle of Texas).— 

 TwoMEY, Ann. Carnegie Mus., xxviii, 1942, 380 (Uinta Basin, Utah).— 

 Behle, Bull. Univ. Utah, xxxiv, No. 2, 1943, 24, 36 (Washington County, 

 sw. Utah; Pine Valley Mountain region); Condor, xlvi, 1944, 71 (Utah). — 

 Burleigh, Occ. Pap. Mus. Zool. Louisiana State Univ., No. 20, 1944, 359 

 (Gulf coast of Mississippi; seen once). — Grinnell and Miller, Pacific 

 Coast Avif., No. 27, 1944, 105 (California; permanent res.). — Hill, Auk, 

 Ixi, 1944, 230 (meas.; sex dimorphism). — Knox, Auk, Ixi, 1944, 23 (Gunnison 

 County, Colo., frequently observed). — Goodrich, Rep. Kansas State Board 

 Agr., Ixiv, No. 267, 1945, 178 (Kansas; occ. vis.). — Green, Griffin, Odum, 

 Stoddard, andToMKiNS, Birds Georgia, 1945, 35 (Georgia; rare). — Haecker, 

 Moser, and Swenk, Nebraska Bird Rev., xiii, 1945, 9 (Nebraska; rare). — 

 McAllister and Marshall, Auk, Ixii, 1945, 183 (Fremont National Forest, 

 Oreg.). — Packard, Auk, Ixii, 1945, 375 (Rocky Mountain National Park, 

 Colo.).— Woodbury and Russell, Bull. Univ. Utah, xxxv, 1945, 38 ("Navaho 

 Country," se. Utah and ne. Arizona; sparse breeding res.). — Alcorn, Condor, 

 xlviii, 1946, 132 (Lahontan Valley, Nev.). — Hartman, Auk, Ixiii, 1946, 52 

 (endocrines). — Palmer and Taber, Auk, Ixiii, 1946, 304 (Mount Katahdin 

 region, Maine). — Wetherbee, Auk, Ixiii, 1946, 592 (Massachusetts).— 

 Arvey, Univ. Kansas Publ. Mus. Nat. Hist., i, 1947, 199 (Idaho).— Hudson, 

 Murrelet, xxviii, 1947, 2 (10 miles w. of Anatone, Blue Mountains area. 

 Wash.). — Stewart and Robbins, Auk, Ixiv, 1947, 268 (3 records for Mary- 

 land; Glen Burnie, Boonsboro, Patuxent Refuge near Bowie). — Williams, 

 Auk, Ixiv, 1947, 186 (Simpson Creek, W^eld County, Colo.; tick parasites, 

 June 19, 1943). 



Aquila chrysaeios |3 canadensis Ridgway, Field and Forest, ii, 1877, 210 (Colorado, 

 breeding) ; Orn. 40th Parallel, 1877, 590 (Carson City and East Humboldt 

 Mountains, Nev.). 



Aquila chrysaetus /3 canadensis Ridgway, in Belding, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., i, 

 1879, 437 (Stockton, Calif., May; mountains of Tuolumne County, Soda 

 Springs) . 



Aquila chrysaetas canadensis Witherby et al., Handb. Brit. Birds, iii, 1939, 

 40, 43, in text (North America). 



Falcofulvus (not of Linnaeus) Shaw, Gen. Zool., vii, pt. i, 1809, 71, part (North 

 America). — Wilson, Amer. Orn., vii, 1818, 13, pi. 55, fig. 1. — Bonaparte, 

 Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, iii, pt. 2, 1824, 345; Obs. Wilson's Amer. 

 Orn., 1826 [6]; Ann. Lye. Nat. Hist. New York, ii, pt. 1, 1826, 25; Contr. 

 Macluriau Lye, i, 1827, 10. — Nuttall, Man, Orn. United States and Canada, 

 Land Birds, 1832, 62.— Peabody, Rep. Orn. Mass., 1839, 262. 



Aquila fulva (not Falco fulvus Linnaeus) Vieillot, Nouv. Diet. Hist. Nat., i, 

 1816, 229, part (Louisiana; Florida; Hudson Bay). 



Aquila chrysaetos? (not Falco chrysaeios Linnaeus) Swainson and Richardson, 

 Fauna Bor.-Amer., ii, 1S31, 12. 



