24 Trans, Acad. Sci. of St. Louis. 



Order LONGIPENNES. Long-winged Swimmers. 

 Family Stercorariidae. Skuas and Jaegers. 

 37. Stercorarius parasiticus (Linn.). Parasitic Jaeger. 



Lestris Richardsonii. Richardson's Jaeger (dark phase). 



Geog. Dist. — Northern part of northern hemisphere. Breeds 

 from Greenland along the Arctic sea-coast to the Behring Sea 

 and the Aleutian Islands. In winter from New York, lUinois 

 and California southward to Brazil and in the Old World to 

 South Africa. 



In migration it has repeatedly been taken in Colorado, in Kan- 

 sas (young male near Lawrence, October 10, 1898, in Nebraska, 

 September 13, 1898, near Lincoln), andMr. W.E.Praeger has in 

 his collection an immature male shot on the Des Moines rapids 

 October 6, 1896. Mr. J. D. Kastendieck of BilHngs, Christian 

 Co., Mo., has in his collection of finely mounted birds a specimen 

 taken on a mill-pond near Billings in August 1905. It was aUve 

 when he secured it and he kept it several days, feeding it on 

 fresh meat and large insects, which it took eagerly from his hand. 



Family Laridae. Gulls and Terns. 

 Subfamily Larinae. Gulls. 

 40. RissA TRiDACTYLA (Linn.). Kittiwake. 



Larus tridactylus. 



Geog. Dist. — Circumpolar regions in summer. In America in 

 winter south to the Middle States and Great Lakes (Wisconsin, 

 IlUnois, Minnesota, Wyoming and Colorado). 



As a rare straggler this species is placed in our list by Mr. 

 John A. Bryant, who took a specimen near Kansas City in 1897. 



</51. Larus argentatus Briinn. Herring Gull. 



Larus argentatus smithsonianus. American Herring Gull. Sea Gull. 



Geog. Dist. — Northern hemisphere, including the whole of 

 North America. Breeds from Maine, the Great Lakes, Minne- 

 sota and British Columbia to the Arctic Sea. In winter along 

 the whole coast of California, the Atlantic coast, the Great Lakes 

 and the larger rivers south to the Gulf Coast, Cuba and Mexico. 



