THEBIRDSOFTEXAS 31 



217. Coccyzus americanus occidentalis. California Cuckoo. 



Western Texas, summer resident, not very common. 



218. Coccyzus erythrophthalmus. Black-billed Cuckoo. 



Rare migrant. Occurs as far west as San Angelo. (Lloyd) 



FAMILY Trogonidae. Trogons. 



219. Trogon ambignns. Coppery-tailed Trogon. 



Occasional on the Lower Rio Grande (Ringgold Barracks and Las 

 Cuevas [Merrill] ). 



FAMILY Alcedinidae. Kingfishers. 



220. Ceryle alcyon. Belted Kingfisher. 



Permanent resident, more abundant in summer. Found along water- 

 courses throu^iout the State. 



221. Ceryle americana septentrionalis. Texan Kingfisher. 



Tolerably common as far north as Bexar, Comal and Hays counties. 

 Recorded from Corpus Christi by Hancock but not recorded from other 

 localities in the same vicinity. 



222. Ceryle torquata. Ringed Kingfisher. 



Casual on the Lower Rio Grande (one specimen in the Philadelphia 

 Academy of Sciences shot near Laredo by Mr. Geo. B. Benners.) 



ORDER Pici. Woodpeckers, Wrynecks, etc. 

 FAMILY Picidae. Woodpeckers. 



223. Campephilus principalis. Ivory-billed Woodpecker. 



Formerly an inhabitant of the thickly wooded portions of the Eastern 

 and Southern sections of the State, (Harris, Montgomery, Jasper 

 counties, etc.) now almost extinct. 



224. Dryobates villosus auduboni. Southern Hairy Woodpecker. 



Eastern Texas, abundant winter visitor in the vicinity of Waco. It is 

 not mentioned in Carroll's list of Refugio county birds nor Attwater's 

 I hst of the birds of San Antonio. Recorded as breeding m Lee county 

 by Singley. It is an abundant bird in summer in Smith and Hender- 

 son counties. 



225. Dryobates villosus hyloscopus. Cabanis Woodpecker. 



Occurs and probably breeds in the Guadalupe Mountains (Bailey, 

 Biological Survey of Texas.) 



