NORTH AMERICAN FAUNA 



This publication series includes monographs and other reports of scientific 

 investigations relating to birds; mammals, reptiles, and amphibians, for pro- 

 fessional readers. It is a continuation by the Bureau of Sport Fisheries and 

 Wildlife of the series begun in 1889 by the Division of Ornithology and Mam- 

 malogy (Department of Agriculture) and continued by succeeding bureaus — 

 Biological Survey and Fish and Wildlife Service. The Bureau distributes 

 these reports to official agencies, to libraries, and to researchers in fields 

 related to the Bureau's work; additional copies may usually be purchased 

 from the Division of Public Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office. 



Reports in North American Fauna since 1950 are as follows (an asterisk 

 indicates that sale stock is exhausted) : 



*60. Raccoons of North and Middle America, by Edward A. Goldman. 1950. 

 153 p. 



*61. Fauna of the Aleutian Islands and Alaska Peninsula, by Olaus J. 

 Murie; Invertebrates and Fishes Collected in the Aleutians, 1936-38, 

 by Victor B. Scheffer. 1950. 406 p. 



*62. Birds of Maryland and the District of Columbia, by Robert E. Stewart 

 and Chandler S. Robbins. 1958. 401 p. 



*63. The Trumpeter Sw£m|^,Its history, habits, and population in the United 

 States, by Winstda^. Banko, 1960. 214 p. 



*64. Pelage and Surface Topography of the Northern Fur Seal, by Victor B. 

 Scheffer. 1961. 206 p. 



65. Seven New White-winged Doves From Mexico, Central America, and 



Southwestern United States, by George B. Saunders. 1968. 30 p. 



66. Mammals of Maryland, by John L. Paradiso. 1969. 193 p. 



67. Natural History of the King Rail, by Brooke Meanley. 1969. 108 p. 



«8. The Sea Otter in the Eastern Pacific Ocean, by Karl W. Kenyon. 1970. 

 352 p. 



69. Natural History of the Swainson's Warbler, by Brooke Meanley. 1971. 

 90 p. 



