214 BIRDS OF OHIO. 
OrpeR TUBINARES. Tube-nosed Swimmers. 
The order is represented by a single species, three indi- 
viduals of which were probably blown inland by a severe 
southeast storm, reaching Cincinnati on the Ohio river. 
Being wholly accidental in the state, and unlikely to occur 
again except under similar conditions, the species does not 
figure economically. 
Family PRocELLARIID#. Petrels, etc. 
2. (98.) AESTRELATA HASITATA (Kuhl.). —. 
Black-capped Petrel. 
Synonym: Procellaria hasitata. 
Lindahl, Auk, XVI, 1899, 75. 
This reference may not be earlier than the Seventh Annual 
Report, Ohio State Academy Sciences, 56, same author, but ab- 
sence of a specific date in that publication makes the above 
reference take precedence. 
Two specimens were taken alive on October 5, 1898, on 
the Ohio shore, and one on October 4, the preceding day, on 
the Kentucky shore. All died in captivity and found their 
way into the collection of the Cin. Soc. Nat. Hist. All were 
in a starved condition, and therefore easily captured. Dr. 
Lindahl says that a severe northeast storm probably drove 
them inland. 
Accidental from the east. 
OrpdER STEGANOPODES. Totipalmate Birds. 
Family Frecatip2. Man-o’-War Bird. 
But a single specimen of the single species comprising 
this family has been taken in the state, reference to which is 
given under the species. 
3. (128.) FREGATA AQguILaA Linn. —. 
Man-o’-War Bird. 
Synonyms: Pelecanus aquilus, Tachypetes aquilus. 
Frigate, Frigate Pelican, Hurricane Bird. 
Davie, Nests and Eggs of N. Am. Birds, 1898, 74. 
