BIKDS OP NORTH AND MIDDLE AMERICA. 9 



Young. — Above everywhere (including remiges and rectrices) 

 barred and transversely spotted with dusky grayish brown and pale 

 rusty, many of the feathers, especially wing-coverts and remiges, 

 tipped with whitish; under parts, including chin, throat, and chest, 

 buffy white everywhere barred with dusky. 



Northern Asia, from western Siberia to Kamchatka, Korea, Man- 

 churia, and Japan, southward to the Himalayas; in winter, migrating 

 to southern China, India, Malay Archipelago, and Moluccas; occa- 

 sional in southeastern Europe; ° accidental on St. Paul Island, Prib- 

 ilof group, Alaska. 



{t)Cuculus borealis Pallas, Zoogr. Rosso-Asiat., ii, 1826, 442, part. 



Cuculus striatus (not of Drapiez, 1823?) Swinhoe, Ibis, 1861, 259, part (Talien 



Bay, n. China).— Blanford, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1893, 316, 317. 

 C!)C[ueulus]swinhoei Cabanis and Heine, Mus. Hein., iv, Heft i, Nov., 1862, 37, 



in text, part (n. China; nomen nudum!). 

 Cuculus telepkonus Heine, Journ. fiir Orn., xi, Sept., 1863, 352 (Japan). 

 Cuculus canorus telephonus Stejneger, Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., no. 29, 1885, 224 

 (Bering I. and Petropaulski, Kamchatka; crit.; habits; measurements); 

 Proc. IT. S. Nat. Mus., x, 1887, 141 (accidental on Bering I.); xxi, 1898, 286 

 (Kuril Islands).— Taczanowski, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1887, 607 (S6oul, 

 Korea, April); 1888, 466 (Korea).— Palmer (W.), Auk, xi, 1894, 325 (St. 

 Paul I., Pribilof group, Alaska; 1 spec, July 4, 1890); Avif. Pribilof Is., 

 1899, 413 (descr.).— American Ornithologists' Union Committee, Auk, 

 xii, 1895, 164; Check List, 2d ed., 1895, no. 388.1; 3d ed., 1910, 182.— Ben- 

 dire, Life Hist. N. Am. Birds, ii, 1895, 32.— Hartert, Ibis, 1904, 429 (Ust- 

 kutsk and Yakutsk, Lena R., Siberia); Vogel palaarktischen Fauna, Heft vii, 

 Bd. ii, i, 1912, 948.— Allen, Bull. Am. Mus. N. H., xxi, 1905, 245 (Lake 

 Kauka, Marcova, and Gichiga, n. e. Siberia; notes).— Blackwelder, Pub. 

 64, Carnegie Inst. (Res. in China, ii, pt. ii), 1907, 490 (s. Shen-si, n. China).— 

 Clark (A. H.), Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., xxxviii, 1910, 59 (Petropaulski, Kam- 

 chatka), 160 (Fusan, Korea). 



C[uculus] canorus telephonus Ridgway, Man. N. Am. Birds, 2d ed., 1896, 596. 



Cuculus canorus (not of Linnseus) Swinhoe, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1871, 395 

 part (Talien Bay, n. China).— Blakiston and Pryer, Ibis, 1878, 227 (Fuji- 

 san, Japan); Trans. Asiat. Soc. Japan, viii, 1880, 205 (Fujisan and Yezo in 

 summer); x, 1882, 130 (Fujisan; Yezo in summer; crit.).— Shelley, Cat. 

 Birds Brit. Mus., xix, 1891, 245, part. 



{1)Cumlus canoroides Muller (S.), Nat. Gesch. Ned., etc., 1839-44, 235 (nomen 

 nudum!; Java; Sumatra; Borneo; Timor). 



(l)Cuculus canorinus (ex C. canoroides Muller, emendation) Cabanis, Journ. fur 

 Orn., 1872, 236 (Baikal).— Taczanowski, Bull. Soc. Zool. France, 1876, 237. 



Cuculus canorinus Swinhoe, Ibis, 1875, 451 (Hakodadi, Japan).— Stejneger, 

 Naturen, 1882, 182 (Bering I.); Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., vi, 1883, 71, part 

 (Bering I.).— Taczanowski, Bull. Soc. Zool. France, 1882, 395.— Dybowski, 

 Bull. Soc. Zool. France, 1883, 368. 



Cuculus canorus johanseni Tschusi, Om. Jahrb., xiv, 1903, 165 (Tomsk, w. Sibe- 

 ria; coll. Von Tschusi). 



° Statement of general range adapted from Hartert, Die Vogel der palaarktischen 

 Fauna, Heft vii, Bd. ii, 1, p. 948. (1912.) 



