Exe Lenka bee IN; les 
1. Colymbus holbeltit (Reinh.). Included by Mr. J. G. Wells in his List 
of the Birds of Grenada, p. 12, 1886. No other record. 
2. Sterocorarius crepidatus Feilden. Zodlogist, p. 350, 1888, recorded 
from Barbados. Cory, Birds of the West Indies, p. 298, 1889. 
3. Larus argentatus Brunn. Has been recorded from Cuba and the 
Bahama Islands. It is probable, however, that most of the records should have 
been referred to L. argentatus smithsonianus. ! 
4. Larus argentatus smithsonianus Coues. Proc. Phila. Acad. Sci., p. 296, 
1862. <A bird of this species was shot near Nassau, N. P., in the winter of 1889. 
Gundlach also records it from Cuba (Repert Fisico Nat. Cuba I. p. 391, 1886). Id., 
ats ©. 1875, p. 307 (Cuba): 
Ws Larus delawarensis Ord. Cuba A. O. U.Code and Check List, p. go, 
r8so. saunders, P. Z. S., 1878, p. 177. 
6. Sterna maxima Saunders (P. Z. S., p. 654, 1876), recognizes the Atlantic 
bird as distinct from that which occurs on the Pacific coast, giving the Atlantic 
bird the name of .S. eurygnatha; but later authors have not separated them. 
7. Sterna dougalli gracilis (Gould). Saunders (P. Z. S., 1876, p. 652), gives 
an interesting account of the variations in the color of the bill of southern speci- 
mens of .S. dougalli. He also states that all the birds he has seen with the red _ bill 
have been from tropical localities. . 
Gould describes a species from Australia which he calls Sterna gracilis 
(P. Z. S., p. 222, 1847), describing it as very like Sterna dougalli; but having the 
bill almost, if not quite, entirely red. 
It is probable that the birds having the bill partly red are resident in the 
West Indies, or come up from South America. 
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