864 BULLETIN 50, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. 
and Galapagos Archipelago (Chatham Island, Oct.) to Peru (Tumbez; 
Chorillos; La Mercéd; Santa Ana; Huaynapata).¢ 
Totanus chloropygius (not of Vieillot) Swarnson and Ricnarpson, Fauna Bor.- 
Am., ii, 1831, 393, part (Great Bear Lake). 
(?) Totanus chloropygius WaGLER, Isis, 1831, 521 (Mexico).—Taczanowsgl, Proc. 
Zool. Soc. Lond., 1874, 560 (Chorillos, Peru). 
(?) T[otanus] chloropygius Tscnup1, Wiegmann’s Archiv fiir Naturg., x, pt. i, 
1844, 312 (Peru). 
Tlotanus] chloropygius GamBEL, Journ. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila., 2d ser., i, 1849, 223. 
[Totanus] chloropygius Gray, Hand-list, iii, 1871, 44, no. 10269, part. 
Totanus solitarius (not Tringa solitaria Wilson) Henry, Proc. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila., 
vii, 1855, 315 (New Mexico).—Covss, Check List, 1873, no. 435, part; Birds 
Northwest, 1874, 498, part; Bull. U. 8. Geol. and Geog. Surv. Terr., iv, 1878, 
643 (Dakota and Montana).—Netson, Proc. Bost. Soc. N. H., xvii, 1875, 342, 
345 (Utah), 351 (Nevada).—Ripeway, Field and Forest, ii, 1877, 211 (Colo- 
rado).—HeEnsHaw, Zool. Expl. W. 100th Merid., 1875, 459 (Camp Apache, 
etc., Arizona, July 29 to Aug. 28; Pueblo, Colorado, July 27).—Mzarns, Bull. 
Nutt. Orn. Club, iv, 1879, 197 (Fort Klamath, Oregon).—Scort, Auk, iii, 1886, 
386 (near Tucson, Arizona, migrant) —AMERICAN ORNITHOLOGISTS’ UNton, 
- Check List, 1886, no. 256, part—Turner, Contr. N. H. Alaska, 1886, 189.— 
Coopsr, Auk, iv, 1887, 91 (Ventura Co., California, winter).—Townsenp 
(C. H.), Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., x, 1887, 198, 235 (Mt. Shasta, California).— 
Luoyp, Auk, iv, 1887, 186 (Concho Co., w. Texas, Sept., Oct., a few in 
spring).—Bzcxuam, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., x, 1887, 637, 653 (Bexar Co., 
Texas).—Netson, Rep. N. H. Coll. Alaska, 1887, 118 (Anvik and Nulato, 
lower Yukon Valley).—SzEBoum, Geog. Distr. Charadriide, 1887, pp. xxiii, 
367, part.—Merriuz (J. C.), Auk, v, 1888, 144 (Fort Klamath, Oregon, May, 
Aug.).—Msrriam, N. Am. Fauna, no. 3, 1890, 88 (Walker Lake, Arizona, 
Sept. 1); no. 5, 1891, 92 (Lemhi River and Birch Creek, Idaho).—ATrwaTER, 
Auk, ix, 1892, 232 (San Antonio, Texas, migrant).—CookeE, Birds Col., 1897, 
67 (breeding from plains up to 10,000 ft.) —Mircuety, Auk, xv, 1898, 307 (San 
Miguel Co., New Mexico, breeding up to 8,000 ft.). 
[ Totanus] solitarius Covers, Key N. Am. Birds, 1872, 259, part. 
T[lotanus] solitarius Rrpaway, Man. N. Am. Birds, 1887, 196, part. 
(?) Totanus solitarius LicatEnstTEIN, Preis-Verz. Mex. Vég., 1830, 3 (Mexico); 
Journ, fir Orn., 1863, 59 (reprint)—Scnater, Proc. Zool. Soc., 1856, 310 
(Cordova, Vera Cruz); 1858, 461 (Ecuador).—Franrzius, Journ. fir Orn., 
1869, 377 (Costa Rica).—Taczanowsk1, Orn. du Pérou, iii, 1886, 368 (Chorillos 
and Tumbez, Peru).—Brrierscn and Sto~zmMann, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 
1892, 400 (Chorillos, Peru). 
Rhyacophilus solitarius Cassin, in Baird, Rep. Pacific R. R. Surv., ix, 1858, 733 
‘part (Fort Tejon, California; Steilacoom, Washington).—HeEnry, Proc. Ac 
Nat. Sci. Phila., xi, 1859, 108 (New Mexico).—Barrp, Cat. N. Am. Birds, 
1859, no. 541, part.—Buaxiston, Ibis, 1862, 9 (Forks Saskatchewan, May); 
1863, 183 (Mackenzie River).—Covugs, Proc. Ac. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1866, 98 
(Fort Whipple, Arizona).—Datu and Bannister, Trans. Chicago Ac. Sci., 
i, 1869, 292 (Nulato, Alaska, May).—Coorrr, Am. Nat., viii, 1874, 18 (Cuya- 
maca Mts., Cal.).—Srevenson, Rep. U. S. Geol. Surv. Terr., 1871, 466 
a The winter range of this form is uncertain, owing to absence of specimens from most 
of the localities south of the United States from which the species has been recorded. 
The above statement of the winter range is, therefore, based more or less on theoretical 
considerations, and some of the references, both under this form and T. solitaria 
olitaria, may be wrongly allocated. 
