APPENDIX. 417 
hawks,? Great-Crested Flycatchers, Great Carolina Wrens? 
(just discovered), Great Horned Owls, Hairy Woodpeckers,’ 
Henslow’s Buntings,+ Hermit Thrushes?,3 House Wrens, Hum- 
mingbirds, Indigo Birds, King-birds, Kingfishers, Least Pewees, 
Lincoin’s Sparrows, Long-billed Marsh Wrens, Long-eared " 
Owls, Marsh Hawks, Maryland ‘ Yellow-throats,” Meadow 
Larks, Nashville Warblers,? Night ‘‘ Hawks,” Olive-sided Fly- 
catchers,? Orchard Orioles, Pewees, Pigeon Hawks,? Pine 
Warblers, Prairie Warblers, Purple Finches, Purple Martins, 
Red-bellied Nuthatches?,3 Red-eyed Vireos, Red-shouldered 
Hawks, Redstarts, Red-tailed Hawks, Red-winged Blackbirds, 
Robins, Rose-breasted Grosbeaks, Savannah Sparrows, Scarlet 
Tanagers, Screech Owls, Sea-side Finches,‘ Sharp-shinned 
Hawks, Sharp-tailed Finches,* Short-billed Marsh Wrens, Short- 
eared Owls, Snow-birds,? Solitary Vireos,? Song Sparrows, 
Sparrow Hawks, Swamp Sparrows, Towhee Buntings, Traill’s 
Flycatchers,? Warbling Vireos, Water ‘‘ Thrushes,”? Whippoor- 
wills, White-bellied Nuthatches, White-breasted Swallows, 
White-eyed Vireos, Wild Pigeons, Wood Pewees, Wood 
Thrushes, Yellow-bellied Flycatchers?, Yellow-bellied Woodpeck- 
ers,5 Yellow-billed Cuckoos, Yellow-breasted Chats?,4 Yellow- 
throated Vireos, Yellow Warblers, and Yellow-winged Sparrows 
(108). The following other birds (of whom the list is probably 
incomplete) also breed here:— Arctic Terns, Bitterns, Black 
(or Dusky) Ducks, Carolina Rails, Coot? (Fulica Americana), 
Great Blue Herons, Green Herons, ‘‘Killdeer” Plover, Laughing 
Gulls, Least Bitterns,4 Least Terns, Little Blue Herons?,# 
Loons,> Night Herons, Pinnated Grouse® (or Prairie Hens), 
Piping Plover, Quail, Ruffed Grouse (or ‘ Partridges” of N.. 
E.), Roseate Terns, Solitary Sandpipers,* Spotted Sandpipers, 
Summer (or Wood) Ducks, Summer “ Yellow-legs,” Teal ?,5 
Upland Plover, Virginia Rails, ‘“Willets,” Wilson’s Terns, and 
Woodcock (28). (Those italicized are very rare, at least as 
sumper-residents.) > 
Norse. The eggs of all the above birds form a nearly or quite 
complete collection of the birds’ eggs of Massachusetts. The 
Pine Finches and Snow Buntings have been known to breed 
(altogether exceptionally) at Cambridge and near Springfield 
respectively ; several birds, such as the Bald Eagles and Pil- 
eated Woodpeckers, have been so far driven from the State, as 
probably to breed here no longer. In regard to the dates 
6 Confined in summer to Western Massachusetts, 
6 See p. 387. 
28 
