222 BULLETIN 60, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM 



Tetrao cupido (not of Linnaeus) McCall, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia. 1851, 

 222 (between Lavaca, Victoria, and Goliad, Tex.). 



( ?) Cupidonia cupido Baird, Rep. Pacific R. R. Surv., ix, 1858, 628, part (Texas) ; 

 Cat. North Amer. Birds, 1859, No. 464, part. 



Cupidonia cupido, var. pailidicincta Ridgway, Bull. Essex Inst., v, 1873, 199 ("South- 

 western prairies — Staked plains ?" Coll., U. S. Nat. Mus.). 



Cupidonia cupido . . , var. pailidicincta CouESj Check List North Amer. Birds, 1874, 

 133, No. 384a. 



Qlupidonia] c[upido] pailidicincta CouES, Check List North Amer. Birds, ed. 2, 

 1882, 584. 



Cupidonia cupido, var. pallidicinctits Baied, Brewer, and Ridgway, Hist. North 

 Amer. Birds, iii, 1874, 446.— Lawrence, Bull. Nuttall Orn. Club, ii, 1877, 52 

 (Pierce City, sw. Missouri; weight). 



[Cupidonia cupido] b? pallidicinctus Coues, Birds Northwest, 1874, 420. 



Cupidonia cupido pailidicincta Ridgway, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., iii, 1880, 196; Nom. 

 North Amer. Birds, 1881, No. 477a.— Coues, Check List North Amer. Birds, 

 ed. 2, 1882, No. 564. 



Cupidonia cupido pallidicinctus Goode, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull. 20, 1883, 316. 



[Cupidonia cupido] pallidicinctus Wheaton, Rep. Birds Ohio, 1882, 446 (distr.). 



Tympanuchus pallidicinctus Ridgway, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., viii, 1885, 355. — 

 American Ornithologists' Union, Check-list, 1886, No. 307; ed. 2, 1895, No. 

 307; ed. 3, 1910, p. 144; ed. 4, 1931, 86 (distr.).— Lloyd, Auk, iv, 1887, 187 (Con- 

 cho County, Middle Concho in Tom Green County, and Colorado City, Mitchell 

 County, w. Tex.). — Cooke, Bird Migr. Mississippi Valley, 1888, 106 (geogr. 

 range). — Goss, Hist. Birds Kansas, 1891, 227 (Kansas; rare; descr.). — Shu- 

 FELDT, Auk, viii, 1891, 367, in text (fossil bones). — Bendire, Life Hist. North 

 Amer. Birds, i, 1892, 96.— Allen, Auk, x, 1893, 344, in text (fossil, Oregon).— 

 Ogilvie-Grant, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus., xxii, 1893, 80 (Kansas). — Lantz, Trans. 

 Kansas Acad. Sci. for 1896-97 (1899), 254 (Neosho Falls, Kans.).— Bailey, 

 Handb. Birds Western United States, 1902, 131 (descr.; distr.).— Snow, Cat. 

 Birds Kansas, ed. 5, 1903, 15 (sw. Kansas; rare). — ^Judd, U. S. Biol. Surv. Bull. 

 24, 1905, 19, 20 (range, food, etc.).— Widmann, Birds Missouri, 1907, 82 (s. and 

 sw. Missouri; no recent records). — Cooke, Auk, xxvi, 1909, 411 (sw. Baca 

 County, Colorado). — Lacey, Auk, xxviii, 1911, 206 (Kerrville, Tex.; none seen 

 since 1886). — Bunker, Kansas Univ. Sci. Bull, vii, 1913, 146 (sw. Kansas, rare 

 resident). — Lincoln, Auk, xxxv, 1918, 236 (Baca County, Colo., May, Sept. near 

 Holly, Prowers County, Colo. ; Arkansas River is northern boundary of the 

 range of the species). — Nice and Nice, Birds Oklahoma, 1924, 36 (Oklahoma). — 

 Rothschild, Bull. Brit. Om. Club, xlvii, 1927, 141 (spec; melanistic mutant). — 

 Bailey, Birds New Mexico, 1928, 207 (New Mexico). — Nice, Birds Oklahoma, 

 rev. ed., 1931, 80 (Oklahoma).— Bent, U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull 162, 1932, 280 (life 

 hist.; distr.). — Wetmoee, Condor, xxxiv, 1932, 142 (remains; cave deposits n. 

 of Carlsbad, New Mexico). — Bennitt, Univ. Missouri Studies, vii, No. 3, 1932, 

 25 (southwestern Missouri; formerly uncommon; now probably extinct). — 

 Howard and Miller, Condor, xxxv, 1933, 16 (bones; New Mexico cave de- 

 posits). — Sutton, Ann. Carnegie Mus., xxiv, 1934, 11 (w. Panhandle of Okla- 

 homa; near Arnett; molt). — Peters, Check-list Birds of World, ii, 1934, 41.— 

 Long, Bull. Univ. Kans. Sci., xxxvi, 1935, 232 (w. Kansas; November). — Long, 

 Trans. Kansas Acad. Sci., xliii, 1940, 440 (Kansas; formerly common resident 

 in south and west; now rare). — Imler, Trans. Kansas Acad. Sci., xxxix, 1936, 

 301 (Rooks County, Kansas; occasional). — Tiemeier^ Auk, Iviii, 1941, 359 in text 

 (healing of bone injuries). — Hellmayr and Conover, Cat. Birds Amer., i. No. 1, 

 1942,224 (syn.; distr.). 



