1914 BIRDS OF ARIZONA 117 



19090. Willard, F. C. The Flammnlated Screech Owl. < Condor, XI, 1909, 

 pp. 199-202, 5 figs. 



Breeding in the Huachuca Mountains. 



1910. American Ornithologists' Union. Check-List of North American Birds. 

 Third Edition (Revised). New York, 1910. Pp. 1-430, 2 pis. (maps). 



1910. Cooke, W. W. Distribution and Migration of North American Shore- 

 birds. = U. S. Dept. Agric., Biol. Surv., Bull. No. 35, 1910, pp. i-ioo, pis. 

 I-IV. 



Pisobia minittilla and Xumcnius americanus recorded for the first time as winter 

 visitants in Arizona. 



1910. Oilman, M. F. Notes from Sacaton, Arizona. < Condor, XII. 1910, 

 pp. 45-46. 



1910. McGee, W. J. Notes on the Passenger Pigeon. < Science, n. s. XXXII, 

 1910, pp. 958-964. 



The writer claims to have found Passenger Pigeons in abundance at Tinajas Altas, 

 in the Gila Mountains, some seventy-five miles southeast of Yuma, in 1894, 1895, 1900, 

 and 1905. Undoubtedly a misidentification. 



1910. Miller, W. De W. The Red-billed Tropic-bird in Arizona. < Auk, 

 XXVII, 1910, pp. 450, 451. 



Correction of a previous erroneous record of Phacthon americanus (see Breninger, 

 1905b). 



1910. Nelson, E. W. A New Subspecies of Pigmy Owl. < Proc. Biol. Soc. 

 Wash., XXIII, 1910, pp. 103-104. 



Glaucidium gnotna pinicola, from the "Rocky Mountain region of the United 

 States and the Sierra Madre of northwestern Mexico," the type from Alma, New 

 Mexico. Specimens from Arizona mentioned. 



19103. Swarth, H. S. Two New Owls from Arizona, with description of the 

 juvenal plumage of Strix occidcntalis occidentals (Xantus). < Univ. Calif. 

 Publ. Zool., VII, pp. 1-8. 



Otus asio gilmam, type locality Blackwater, Final County, and Strix occidentalis 

 huachucae, type locality Huachuca .Mountains. 



1 9 rob. Swarth, H. S. Miscellaneous Records from Southern California and 

 Arizona. < Condor, XII, 1910, pp. 107-110. 



I9ioa. Visher, S. S. A Correction: A New Bird for the United States. < Auk, 

 XXVII, IQIO, p. 210. 



The Red-eyed Cowbird recorded from Tucson proves to be Tangavius aencus acncus, 

 and not T. a. involucratus, as previously stated. 



1910!). Visher, S. S. Notes on the Birds of Pima County, Arizona. < Auk, 

 XXVII, 1910, pp. 279-288. 



One hundred and twenty-seven species listed, including several not otherwise known 

 to occur in the state. Many of them are unquestionably misidentifications, and the 

 paper contains besides so many obvious mistakes and absurd statements that the re- 

 cords contained in it must perforce be disregarded. 



