169] 



BIBLIOGRAPHICAL APPENDIX. 1?7 735 



1877. EIDGWAY, R. Continued. 



tions of the localities where collections and observations were made, general 

 remarks on the avifaunas of the Great Basin, and a catalogue of the 2C2 species 

 collected or observed all this interesting matter being preliminary to the report 

 proper. In the latter, the birds are treated at full length, with brief synonymy 

 and extended critical and field notes; the whole forming one of the most valu- 

 able contributions we possess to the bird-history of Utah, Nevada, and adjacent 

 portions of California. The articles are specially notable for the many meas- 

 urements of fresh specimens, and notes of the life-colors of the bill, feet, and eyes. 

 The specimens collected are all individually catalogued with these notes, in 

 addition to the general text. There are no new species in this report ; but the 

 nomenclature differs in many instances from that previously used by Mr. Ridg- 

 way in the History of North American Birds and elsewhere, during 1873-77. 



1877. RIDGWAY, R. The Birds of Guadalupe Island, discussed with refer- 

 ence to the present Genesis of Species. < Bull. Nutt. Ornith. Club, 

 ii, No. 3, July, 1877, pp. 58-66. 



The material here discussed is the same as that upon which was based a prior 

 descriptive paper, Bull U. S. Geol. Surv. Terr., ii, 1876, pp. 183-195, q. v. 



1877. RIDGWAY, R. Mrs. Maxwell's Colorado museum. Catalogue of the 

 Birds. < Field and Forest, ii, No. 11, May, 1877, pp. 195-198 : No. 12, 

 June, 1877, pp. 208-214. 



List of 234 spp. represented in this fine collection, with little annotation. 

 Scops oiio, , maxwellice, p. 213, n. v. 



1877. RIDGWAY, R. Mrs. Maxwell's Colorado Museum. Additional Notes. 



< Field and Forest, iii, No. 1, July, 1877, p. 11. 



On Junco caniceps and J. annectens. 



1877. ROOSEVELDT, T., and MINOT, H. D. The Summer Birds of the Adiron- 

 dacks in Franklin County, N. Y. By Theodore Rooseveldt, Jr., and 

 H.D.Minot. 1877. 8vo. pp.4. 

 97 spp., shortly annotated. 



1877. ST. CLAIR, J. W. Some Southern wood notes [Georgia]. < Forest 

 and Stream, viii, May 24, 1877, p. 240. 



1877. SCOTT, DAVID. The Tendency in Birds to Vary their Habits. < Field 

 and Forest, vol. ii, No. 7, Jan., 1877, pp. 107-114. 



Nearly all the illustrations of the well-known fact are drawn from North 

 American birds. Two generalizations are suggested: I. "The influencing 

 agent which prompts the bird to build its domicile is instinct." II. "Nearly all 

 birds modify their habitations to accord with exteral [sic] influences." That is 

 to say internal influences prompt them to build, and external influences make 

 them build in different ways. 



187-7. |] SCOTT, W. E. D.] [On Albinism, and other Notes from New Jersey.] 



< The Country, i, Nov. 17, 1877, p. 43. 



1877. [ScoTT, W. E. D.] [Rare Occurrences in Southern New Jersey.] 



< The Country, i, Dec. 8, 1877, p. 79. 



1877. [ScoiT, W. E. D.] [Ornithological] Notes from Central New York. 



< The Country, i, Dec. 29, 1877, p. 11 5. See p. 165. 



1877. STEVENS, W. B. Ornithological Notes [of Arrivals of Birds at West 

 Farms, N. Y. ] < Forest and Stream, viii, July 19, 1877, p. 400. 



1877. STREETS, T. H. Contributions to the Natural History of the Hawaiian 

 and Fanning Islands and Lower California, made in connection 

 with the United States North Pacific Surveying Expedition, 



