gO liulletin 1, Biological Society of Washington, 1918. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY. 

 Warden, David Baillie. 



(Birds seen in the District of Columbia.] 



A chorographical and statistical description of the District of 

 Columbia, Paris, 1816, pp. 210-211. 



32 species. 



Coues, Elliott, and Prentiss, D. Webster. 



List of birds ascertained to inhabit the District of Columbia, with 

 the times of arrival and departure of such as are non-residents, and 

 brief notices of habits, etc. 



Sixteenth Ann. Rep. Smiths. Inst., 1861 (1862), pp. 399-421. 



226 species listed, 1 erroneously. 



Burroughs, John. 



Spring in Washington, with an eye to the birds. 



Atlantic Monthly, Vol. XXIII, May, 1869, pp. 580-591. 



Reprinted in Wake Robin, Cambridge, 1895, pp. 127-156. 



Notes on flowers; birds; crow roosts; orchard oriole breeding in 

 Capitol grounds; other birds there; black-throated bunting; red- 

 headed the most common woodpecker, more common than the robin; 

 and summer yellow-bird more common in town than out. 



Shufeldt, R. W. 



Birds of the District of Columbia. 



Field and Forest, Vol. I, Nos. 8-9, Jan.-Feb., 1876, pp. 79-80. 



A list of 38 common permanent residents and 29 common winter 

 residents, the latter including Ectopistes migratorius. Six other 

 species are mentioned. 



Jouy, Pierre Louis. 



Catalogue of the Birds of the District of Columbia. 



Field and Forest, Vol. II, No. 9, Mar., 1877, pp. 154-156; No. 10, 

 Apr., 1877, pp. 178-181. 



240 species in all. Mr. Jouy read a list of 230 species of birds at 

 a meeting of Potomac-side Naturalists Club, Nov. 15, 1875. 



Coues, E. and Prentiss, D. Webster. 



Remarks on Birds of the District of Columbia. 



Field and Forest, Vol. II, No. 11, May, 1877, pp. 191-193. 



Comment on Jouy's Catalogue, with which these remarks were 

 also separately published, Washington, D. C, 1877, pp. 1-11. 



Jouy, Pierre Louis. 

 Field Notes on some of the Birds of the District of Columbia. 

 Field and Forest, Vol. Ill, No. 3, Sept., 1877, pp. 51-52. 

 Notes on 6 species, one, the lark sparrow, an addition to the list. 



