Publications Reviewed 47 



Wells W. Cooke gives a list of 110 winter birds of Oklahoma in 

 the October, 1914, number, the annotations including records ot 

 migration. In the same number R. W. Williams presents a third 

 supplement to the birds of Leon County, Florida. There are 22 spe- 

 cies noted. 



In the January, 1915, number, H. H. Kopman presents Part VI, 

 and in the April number Part VII of his "List of the Birds of Lou- 

 isiana." In this number Robert Cushman Murphy gives the re- 

 sults of a ten-hour visit at Fernando Noronha, and in the July num- 

 ber "The Bird Life of Trinidad Islet." 



The remaining faunal paper in the July number is "Summer 

 Birds of Forrester Island, Alaska," by George Wilett. 



In the October, 1915, number, S. F. Rathbun gives a "List of 

 Water and Shore Birds of the Puget Sound Region in the Vi- 

 cinity of Seattle." 



Ecological impers, considered in the broadest sense. The pa- 

 per by E. S. Cameron in the April, 1914, number, on the Ferrugi- 

 nous Rough-leg in Montana, is well illustrated and gives an ac- 

 count of an excellent piece of field work. In the same number 

 Aretas A. Saunders gives "An Ecological Study of the Breeding 

 Birds of an Area near Choteau, Montana." 



George Finlay Simmons gives a study of the Clapper Rail in 

 Texas in the July, 1914, number, and a study of the nesting of 

 certain birds in Texas in the July, 1915, number. 



In the January, 1915, number, Alvin R. Cahn writes of a cap- 

 tive Virginia Rail. 



In the April, 1915, number, Frederick H. Kennard has a paper 

 on "The Okaloacoochee Slough," which is more than usually in- 

 teresting. 



"The Plum Island Night Herons" is an interesting paper in the 

 October, 1915, number by S. Waldo Bailey. 



Mr. A. H. Wright continues his series of papers on "Early Rec- 

 ords of the Wild Turkeys" in several numbers. 



Bird-Lore. — Since the last notice of this magazine in these col- 

 umns there have been received Volumes 16 and 17, except the first 

 number of Vol. 16, which was the last number reviewed. 



The series of colored pictures of the Fringillidse has been com- 

 pleted, and the Sylviidse and Paridse also completed. These col- 

 ored illustrations of our native birds possess a peculiar value and 

 make this magazine worth many times its subscription price alone. 

 One of the delightful new features is the series of papers from the 

 pen of Louis Agassiz Fuertes, accompanied with his inimitable 

 sketches on "Impressions of the Voices of Tropical Birds." "A 



