198 BULLETIN 50, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM 



lumbia Prov. Mus. No. 1, 1939, 27 (Peace River District, British Columbia; 

 spec; young). 



Pediocaetes phasianellus campestris Cooke, Colorado State Agr. Coll. Bull. 37, 1897, 

 71 (Colorado; not common) ; Bull. 44, 1898, 159 (Colorado; not uncommon in 

 northwestern part of the state) . 



Pediocstes phasianellus campestris American Ornithologists' Union, Check-list, 

 1886, No. 308b, part; ed. 2, 1895, 117, part; ed. 3, 1910, 144, part.— Ridgway, 

 Man. North Amer. Birds, 1887, 204, part.— Cooke, Bird Migr. Mississippi Val- 

 ley, 1888, 106, part.— Bendire, Auk, vi, 1889, 301 in text (Fort Custer, Mont.) ; 

 Life Hist. North Amer. Birds, i, 1892, 101, part.— Thorne, Auk, xii, 1895, 213 

 (Fort Keogh, Mont.).— Macoun, Cat. Can. Birds, 1900, 213, part (plains of 

 U. S. and northward).— Sclater, Hist. Birds Colorado, 1912, 152, part (Colo- 

 rado ; not common, chiefly east of the mountains) . 



Pedioccetes phasianellus campestris? Richmond and Knowlton, Auk, xi, 1894, 302 

 (Montana). 



P[edioccEtes] phasianellus campestris Ridgway, Man. North Amer. Birds, 1887, 204, 

 part. 



Pediocaetes phasianellus campestris Goss, Hist. Birds Kansas, 1891, 228 (Kansas; 

 habits; descr.). 



Pedioecetes phasianellus campestris Zimmer, Proc. Nebraska Orn. Union, v, pt 2, 

 1911, 21 (Nebraska; Dawes County Forest Reserve; young). — Grave and 

 Walker, Birds Wyoming, 1913, 40 (Wyoming; common in eastern and north- 

 western parts). — Saunders, Pacific Coast Avif. No. 14, 1921, 59 (Montana; 

 intergrades with columbiamis in western part of state). — Over and Thoms, 

 Birds South Dakota, 1921, 77 (South Dakota).— Wood, Misc. Publ. Mus. Zool. 

 Univ. Michigan, No. 10, 1923, 36 (North Dakota; common). — Mitchell, Can. 

 Field Nat., xxxviii, 1924, 108 (Saskatchewan; common resident). — Gabrielson 

 and Jewett, Auk, xli, 1924, 297 (in badlands and brakes of Missouri River, N. 

 Dak.).— Nice and Nice, Birds Oklahoma, 1924, 37 (Oklahoma Panhandle; for- 

 mer resident, now nearly extirpated).— Lincoln, Auk, xlii, 1925, 60 (Turtle and 

 Devils Lakes, N. Dak.; food) .—Williams, Wils. Bull., xxxviii, 1926, 30 (Red 

 River Valley, ne. N. Dak.). — Taverner, Birds Western Canada, 1926, 172 in 

 text, part ; Birds Canada, 1934, 161 in text, part. — Larson, Wils. Bull., xl, 1928, 

 46 (e. McKenzie County, N. Dak.). — American Ornithologists' Union, Check- 

 list, ed. 4, 1931, 86, part.— Nice, Birds Oklahoma, rev. ed., 1931, 81 (Oklahoma 

 Panhandle, former resident, now nearly extirpated) .■ — Harrold, Wils. Bull., xlv, 

 1933, 19 (Lake Johnston, Saskatchewan). — Peters, Check-list Birds of World, 

 ii, 1934, 41, part. — Johnson, Wils. Bull., xlvi, 1934, 8 (nw. Manitoba; habits; 

 migr.). — McCreary and Mickey, Wils. Bull., xlvii, 1935, 129 in text (se. Wyo. ; 

 resident). — Snyder, Univ. Toronto Studies, biol. ser.. No. 40, 1935, 4, 7, 40 in 

 text, 55 (crit. ; monogr.) ; Occ. Papers Roy. Ontario Mus. Zool., No. 2, 1935, 5 

 (monogr.). — Weydemeyer and Marsh, Condor, xxxviii, 1936, 194 (Lake Bow- 

 doin, Mont.). — Fox, Auk, liv, 1937, 534 in text (North Dakota; feeding on wild 

 plum). — Alexander, Univ. Colorado Studies Zool., xxiv, 1937, 91 (Boulder 

 County, Colo. ; correction ; no recent records) . — Long, Trans. Kansas Acad. Sci., 

 xliii, 1940, 440 (Kansas; common formerly, now probably extirpated). — Hell- 

 mayr and Conover, Cat. Birds Amer., 1, No. 1, 1942, 219 part (syn. ; distr.). — 

 Wright and Hiatt, Auk, Ix, 1943, 265 in text (age indicators in plxun. ; Mon- 

 tana). 



Pedioscetes phasianellus campestris Lantz, Trans. Kansas Acad. Sci., for 1896-1897 

 (1899), 254 (Kansas; common in western part). — Cary, Auk, xviii, 1901, 232 

 (Black Hills, S. Dak.).— Snow, Cat. Birds Kansas, ed. 5, 1903, 15 (w. Kansas; 

 common). — Bent, Auk, xxiv, 1907, 428 (sw. Saskatchewan; nests and eggs). — 



