LIST OF PUBLICATIONS. 



153 



Miller, Gerrit S., jr. — Continued. 



This is a northern animal, which 

 had not previously been re- 

 corded from any part of the 

 United States coast south of 

 Chesapeake Bay. 



A new flying squirrel from 



eastern Asia. 



Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash- 

 ington, 31, Feb. 21, 

 1918, pp. 3, 4. 

 Described as Ptcromys volans 

 incanus, a race of flying squirrel 

 discovered at Verkhne Kolymsk, 

 eastern Siberia, by Copley 

 Amory, jr. 



A new river-dolphin from 



China. 



Smithsonian Misc. 



Colls., 68, No. 9, 



Mar. 30, 1918, pp. 



1-12, pis. 1-13. 



Describes as Lipotes veanllifcr 



a dolphin representing a new 



genus and species collected in 



Miller, Gerrit S., jr. — Continued. 



Tung Ting Lake, China, by 

 Charles M. Hoy. The animal is 

 a member of a group that in- 

 cludes numerous fossil species, 

 but is now nearly extinct. Its 

 only known living relative oc- 

 curs in the Amazon and Orinoco. 



Three new bats from Haiti 



and Santo Domingo. 



Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash- 

 ington, 31, May 10, 

 191S, pp. 39, 40. 

 Local representatives of gen- 

 era widely distributed in the 

 West Indies. 

 Taylor, Walter P. Revision of the 

 rodent genus Aplodontia. 



Univ. California Pub. 

 Zool., 17, No. 16, 

 May 29, 1918, pp. 

 435-504, pis. 26-29, 

 figs. A-P. 

 Primarily based on the mate- 

 rial in U. S. National Museum. 



BIRDS. 



Bangs, Outram, and Thomas E. 

 Penard. Notes on a collection of 



Surinam birds. 



Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., 

 62, No. 2, Apr., 

 1918, pp. 25-93. 

 Observations on over 300 spe- 

 cies and subspecies, of which 18, 

 chiefly from other parts of South 

 America, are described as new. 

 Two genera are also introduced 

 as new. 

 Bartsch, Paul. Additions to the Hai- 

 tian avifauna. 



Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash- 

 ington, 30, July 27, 

 1917, pp. 131, 132. 

 Describes a new subspecies of 

 rail, revives a subspecies of 

 golden warbler, and records 11 

 other species previously not 

 reported from this island. 

 Bergtold, W. H. An early Colorado 

 record of the white-tailed ptarmigan. 

 Auk, 34, No. 3, July, 

 1917, p. 334. 

 Notice of the first record of 

 this species in Colorado, based 

 on two specimens obtained by 

 Capt. R. B. Marcy in 1858, and 

 sent to the Smithsonian Insti- 

 tution. 

 Brown, Edward J. The San Lucas 

 sparrow (Passerculus rostra tus gut- 

 tatus) in California. 



Brown, Edward J. — Continued. 



Auk, 34, No. 3, July, 



1917, p. 340. 

 Records a series of specimens 



obtained in Orange County, Cal. 

 This subspecies was previously 

 known only from south of the 

 Mexican boundary. 



Chapman, Frank M. Notes on the 

 plumage of North American birds. 

 Forty-fifth paper. 



Bird-Lore, 19, No. 6, 

 Nov.-Dec, 1917, pp. 

 330, 331, 1 pi.; 

 Forty-sixth paper, 

 20, No. 1, Jan.- 

 Feb., 1918, pp. 19, 

 20, 1 pi.; Forty- 

 seventh paper, 20, 

 No. 2, Mar.-Apr., 



1918, p. 153, 1 pi. ; 

 Forty-eighth paper, 

 20, No. 3, May- 

 June, 1918, pp. 222, 

 223, 1 pi. 



The distribution of bird-life 



in Colombia ; a contribution to a bio- 

 logical survey of South America. 



Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. 



Hist., 36, 1917, pp. 



i-x, 1-749, pis. 1-41, 



figs. 1-21. 



Very important contribution 



to the ornithology of Colombia, 



based on recent explorations. 



