LIST OF PUBLICATIONS. 



123 



Faxon, Walter — Continued. 



this form a hybrid. The various 

 published records on the subject 

 are discussed and the results tested 

 by Mendel's law. 



Ferry, John Farwele. Catalogue of 



a collection of birds from Costa Rica. 



Field Mus. Nat. Hist., Pub. 



• 146, Ornith. Ser., 1, No. 



6, Sept., 1910, pp. 257-282. 



An annotated list of 74 species 



collected by the author in eastern 



Costa Rica. 



Hellmayr, C. E. The birds of the Rio 

 Madeira. 



Novit. Zooh, 17, No. 3, Dec. 

 15, 1910, pp. 257-428. 



A carefully prepared catalogue 

 of the birds of the Rio Madeira 

 region, Brazil, based chiefly upon 

 the early collections of Natterer, 

 and the recent explorations of W. 

 Hoffmanns. 463 species and sub- 

 species are enumerated, with perti- 

 nent comment on most of them, 

 followed by lists of the species 

 peculiar to the Madeira Valley and 

 several neighboring districts. 



The following are described as 

 new : Tachyphonus cristatus ma- 

 deira? (p. 277), Pipra aureola 

 calamw (p. 303), Hypocnemis 

 myotherina sororia (p. 358), and 

 G-rallaria macularia diluta (p. 

 370). 



Jouy, Pierre Louis. The paradise fly- 

 catchers of Japan and Korea. 



Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., 37, 

 No. 1721, Aug. 4, 1910, 

 pp. 651-655. 

 Terpsiphone atrocaudata (Eyton) 

 is the name adopted for the spe- 

 cies of southern Japan and Korea. 

 The form inhabiting Hondo, Japan, 

 and Amoy and Hongkong, China, 

 is described as new under the 

 name T. owstoni. The introduc- 

 tion, and a footnote on p. 652 per- 

 taining to the use of the generic 

 name Terpsiplwne, are by Dr. 

 Stejneger. 



Kloss, C. Boden. On mammals and 

 birds from Trengganu. 



Joum. Fed. Malay States 

 Museums, 4, No. 2, April, 

 1911, pp. 135-143. 

 An annotated list of 79 species, 

 based chiefly upon a collection 

 made by Dr. W. L. Abbott and 

 the writer in September and Oc- 

 tober, 1900. 



Mearns, Edgar A. Descriptions of ten 

 new African birds. 



Smithsonian Misc. Colls., 



56, No. 14, Dec. 23, 1910, 



pp. 1-7. 



Francoliniis scluietti maranensis, 



F. s. kapitensis, F. s. keniensis, 



Nectarinia johnstoni idius, Cinnyris 



mediocris keniensis, Cyanomitra 



chang am wen sis, Anthreptes collaris 



clachior, Pseudonigrita arnaudi 



kapitensis, Lagonosticta incerta 



and Sporopipes frontalis abyssin- 



icus are described as new, chiefly 



from material collected by the 



Smithsonian African Expedition. 



Descriptions of fifteen new 



African birds. 



Smithsonian Misc. Colls., 56, 



No. 20, April 17, 1911, pp. 



1-11. 

 The following are diagnosed as 

 new : Pternistes leucoscepus ke- 

 niensis, P. I. kilimensis, Franco- 

 linus grisescens, F. grantii delutes- 

 cens, F. schuetti zappeyi, Ptilo- 

 pachus fuscus keniensis, Turnix 

 sylvatica alleni, Xantliophilus 

 oojeri alleni, Urwginthus bengalus 

 brunneigularis , Pycnonotus layardi 

 fayi,P. I. peasei,P. 1. phwocephalus, 

 Pogonocichla cucullata keniensis, 

 Eminia lepidus hypochlorus, and 

 ^i/liHetta whytU loringi. The 

 types of 11 of the above are in 

 the U. S. National Museum. 



Oberholser, Harry C. A monograph 

 of the flycatcher genera Hypothymis 

 and Cyanonympha. 



Proc. V. S. Nat. Mus., 39, 

 No. 1803, Feb. 25, 1911, 

 pp. 585-615. 

 This paper is based on a series 

 of 205 skins, of which 180 are in 

 tbe U. S. National Museum. 

 Hypothymis superciliaris is made 

 the type of a new genus, Cyano- 

 nympha. Hypothymis proper is 

 divided into 3 species, H. rowleyi, 

 H. dbbotti, and H. azurea, the 

 last with 17 subspecies, of which 

 the following are characterized as 

 new : H. azurea prophata, H. a. 

 gigantoptera, H. a. forrestia, H. a. 

 opisthocyanea, H. a. idiochroa, H. 

 a. ponera, H. a. isocara, H. a. 

 leucophila, H. a. amelis, H. a. 

 calocara, and H. a. richmondi. 



A revision of the forms of the 



hairy woodpecker (Dryobates vil- 

 losus [Linnaeus]). 



Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., 40, 

 No. 1840, June 3, 1911, 

 pp. 595-621, pi. 70. 



